Tomato charms
Mississippi awards selection committee
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
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Mini
Charm tomatoes will charm growers in the
same way they impressed the Mississippi
Plant Selections Committee for the
Mississippi Medallion
Awards.
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A tomato
variety has charmed the Mississippi Plant Selections
Committee to become the first vegetable chosen as a
Mississippi Medallion award winner. This standout performer
is the Mini Charm Tomato.
It may
be hard to believe, but a little 6-inch transplant is like a
thoroughbred racehorse packed with vigor. The Mini Charm is
a tall indeterminate variety. Indeterminate means it will
grow, blossom and produce tomatoes throughout the growing
season depending on climatic conditions.
The
continuous growth produces many main stems, all capable of
flowering and producing fruit. Because of this abundant lush
growth, caging or staking is recommended. At the Truck Crops
Branch Experiment Station in Crystal Springs, those in cages
reached 6 to 7 feet tall.
In
Mississippi State University trials, the Mini Charm produced
77 fruit to the pound and 1.5 pounds of fruit per picking.
The tomatoes are sweet and delicious.
If that
is not enough to get you all excited, then consider the Mini
Charm is an environmentally friendly plant in that it is
disease resistant for Fusarium, Verticillium and Tobacco
Mosaic viruses.
The
Mini Charm is a mid-season variety, meaning it will be only
75 days from transplanting to your first tasty fruit.
Tomatoes need full sun and deep, well-drained soil. They
require phosphorous, nitrogen, potash and minor elements.
They are not fond of acidic soil, so you may need to add
lime. Space plants 2 to 3 feet apart in the row and add a
layer of mulch to deter weeds and conserve
moisture.
Feed
with light applications of slow-release fertilizer every
four to six weeks. Maintain your harvest and you will be
picking vine-ripe, delicious tomatoes until
frost.
Mini
Charm tomatoes can easily be grown in containers, so don't
fret if you have no garden plot. The container needs to be
at least a foot deep with drainage holes at the bottom. I'll
never forget seeing a friend grow cherry tomatoes in an old
bushel basket on the patio table. His harvest was as great
as mine was out in the garden. If growing in a container,
use a water-soluble fertilizer about every two weeks, as you
will more than likely be watering daily during the
summer.
We've
come a long way since that day in 1820 when an audience
gathered at the courthouse in New Jersey to watch Col.
Robert Gibbon Johnson die from eating a basketful of
tomatoes. Johnson's physician warned he would, "Foam and
froth at the mouth ... double over with appendicitis ... and
expose himself to brain fever." Johnson didn't die that day,
and a new era for tomatoes slowly began.
Today,
the tomato is the No. 1 vegetable grown not only Mississippi
gardens but throughout the United States. The Mini Charm
will surely add to its popularity.
The
Mississippi Medallion program is in its eighth year and is
sponsored by the MSU Extension Service, the Mississippi
Nursery and Landscape Association and the Mississippi Plant
Selections Committee. Look for the colorful point-of-sale
material directing you to the Mini Charm tomato at your
garden center.
-30-
Released:
March 25, 2004
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
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